| 17th
October, 2006
MAL FLETCHER
The
new head of Britain’s army, Sir Richard Dannatt, last
week questioned how long his forces should remain in Iraq.
What most people don’t know is that he also suggested
that British society needs a renewal of Christian values.
He questioned the place of a multi-faith approach to deciding
our core cultural values.
"It
is time for a debate not just about the politics of
multi-culturalism and the use of armed force, but
the values which these are meant to protect. It is
time for us to stop our fruitless dalliance with political
correctness, which only confuses issues and makes
social cohesion more difficult to achieve."
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Sir
Richard did not question the decision to enter Iraq; he simply
suggested that the government needs to declare a clear timetable
for the endgame and that withdrawal should happen sooner rather
than later. He also suggested that the Army’s presence
in Iraq is now doing more harm than good, by attracting the
violence of hardline insurgents.
These comments were widely reported and perhaps sensationalised
by sections of the British media. Many suggested that his
statements represent an unusually public wedge between government
policy and the head of the Army.
Reading some of the reported comments of men and women on
the front-lines of the conflict, I can only conclude that
the General’s thoughts reflect the feeling among his
troops.
Yet the remainder of his statement should be just as newsworthy,
given that it goes to the heart of what drives British values,
the values for which the armed forces are called to fight.
The Times called the General ‘a serious-minded
evangelical Christian, [who is] visibly honest.’The
Daily Mail noted that he is a practising Christian and
this ‘informs his views on the Army's role and place
in society.’
The Mail continued: ‘He believes our weak values
have allowed the predatory Islamist vision to take hold.’
‘We need to face up to the Islamist threat,’ said
Sir Richard, ‘to those who act in the name of Islam
and in a perverted way try to impose Islam by force on societies
that do not wish it. In the Cold War, the threats to this
country were about armies rolling in. Threats now are not
territorial but to the values of our country.’
He feels that it is vital for the army, which is entrusted
with using lethal force, that society should ‘maintain
high values and that there is a moral dimension to that and
a spiritual dimension.’
‘When I see the Islamist threat,’ Dannatt continued,
‘I hope it doesn't make undue progress because there
is a moral and spiritual vacuum in this country.’
‘Our society has always been embedded in Christian values;
once you have pulled the anchor up there is a danger that
our society moves with the prevailing wind.’
As someone who is, he said, responsible to make sure that
the Army’s moral compass is properly aligned, and that,
in his words ‘we live by what we believe in’,
the General is concerned that we’re abandoning the Christian
ideas that have made our society strong and durable.
‘It is said we live in a post-Christian society,’
he remarked. ‘I think that is a great shame. The Judaic-Christian
tradition has underpinned British society. It underpins the
British Army.’
The General did not suggest for a moment that everyone serving
in his Army should be a Christian. In fact, he mentioned the
work of Muslims in the ranks. What he is saying is that no
Army - and no society - can long stand if it does not agree
on its core values.
An Army cannot survive if it is wishy-washy on the what it
stands for, or against. Neither can the society from which
the Army is drawn and which it is called to defend.
As I’ve written before, we in the West are not children
of nothing. We are the offspring of our cultural parentage;
we have inherited a set of ideas and values which have shaped
our culture, making it strong.
We are foolish to turn away from these, on the flimsy pretext
of being inoffensive to those who have a different view.
The poet T. S. Elliott once said that he could not see how
Europe societies could survive the complete eradication of
Christian ideas and values.
It is time for the voice of the church to be heard - not simply
the shrinking institutionalised church, but the wider and
very often fast-growing evangelical and charismatic wings
of the church.
It is time for a debate not just about the politics of multi-culturalism
and the use of armed force, but the values which these are
meant to protect. It is time for us to stop our fruitless
dalliance with political correctness, which only confuses
issues and makes social cohesion more difficult to achieve.
It is time to look again at what Sir Richard called our ‘moral
compass’ and decide what we represent as a society and
what we do not.
Mal
Fletcher is the founder and director of Next Wave International,
a Christian mission to contemporary cultures
with a special focus on Europe.
Reproduced with permission from
www.nextwaveonline.com. Copyright Mal Fletcher 2006.
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